Online Webinar – Recorded February 14 2020
Activity Type: Education – Online or Digital Media 1 PDU – Free
Provider: ProjectManagement.com / Gantthead (REP #2488)
Once viewed your PDU Will automatically Be recorded with PMI®
ProjectManagement.com / Gantthead premium content
Is available to PMI® members.
Where Should You Use Scrum & Where Should You Use Kanban?
Many factors weigh into this decision, including whether your teams are in development or maintenance mode and whether their work is highly predictable or sporadic.
You will come away with a better understanding of Scrum and Kanban and when to utilize each, together or separately, to improve agility of their teams.
Scrum and Kanban are both crucial agile methodologies to improve productivity of project teams.
Scrum provides a framework for organizing work by priority and keeping teams on task daily, while Kanban provides a framework for managing the flow and moving high-priority work through a path to completion.
- What is common between Scrum and Kanban, &
- What is different?
- Where should you use Scrum and where should you use Kanban?
These questions and more will be answered in this webinar.
You will walk away with a better understanding of Scrum and Kanban and when to utilize each, together or separately, to improve agility of their teams.
Presenter: NK Shrivastava (LinkedIn profile) PMP, PMI-RMP, PMI-ACP, CSM, SPC, is CEO of RefineM LLC and an experienced and certified Project Management Consultant, Risk Management Professional, and Agile Coach with over 25 years of experience in project management. NK is an experienced instructor/trainer on project management and Agile topics and specializes in project management fundamentals, risk management, and project recovery.
Note: You have to sign in to ProjectManagement.com with your PMI® credentials to register for this opportunity. If you are not signed in with your PMI® credentials you will not see the “Register for this webinar” link
Click to register for:
Scrum vs. Kanban: Which Works Best Where?
1.0 | 0 | 0 |
Technical Project Management | Leadership | Strategic & Business Management |
NOTE: For PMI® Audit Purposes – Print Out This Post! Take notes on this page during the presentation and also indicate the Date & Time you attended. Note any information from the presentation you found useful to your professional development and place it in your audit folder.